Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) clashed with local Popular Committees fighters in Zinjibar in the southern governorate of Abyan on January 5. AQAP recently recaptured Zinjibar and nearby Ja’ar, which it occupied in 2011 and part of 2012. Abdul Latif al Sayyed, the leader of Abyan’s Popular Committees, recently fled to Aden to escape AQAP’s efforts to assassinate him.[1]

Unidentified militants assassinated an officer of the Criminal Investigations Division in Aden on January 6. The attack follows yesterday’s attempted assassination of the governors of Aden and Lahij provinces in Aden and the assassination of a local official.[2]

The Saudi-led coalition continues to launch airstrikes on al Houthi-Saleh military targets throughout northern and central Yemen. The coalition escalated attacks in and around the capital Sana’a on January 5 and 6, targeting al Daylami airbase and al Houthi military barracks in the district of al Nahdayn, as well as al Hafa base southeast of Sana’a. The coalition also conducted strikes in al Hudaydah governorate in western Yemen and Ma’rib and al Jawf governorates in north central Yemen.[3]

Pro-al Houthi news outlet Al Masirah TV claimed that al Houthi forces killed an Islamic State of Iraq and al Sham (ISIS) field commander, Hassan Hamoud Uqlan, in clashes in Taiz city on January 5. The clashes occurred in the Thu’bat district in the southeast part of the city, which recently witnessed fighting between coalition-backed and al Houthi-Saleh forces. There are no previous reports of ISIS ground fighters operating in Taiz, but AQAP fighters are active in the city.[4]

Horn of Africa Security Brief

Unidentified gunmen attacked a female employee of FAVORI LLC, a Turkish company operating in Somalia, on January 6 in Mogadishu’s Wardhigley district, Banadir region. The gunmen ambushed the victim as she was leaving her house, wounding her before fleeing the scene. It is unclear if the victim is a Turkish national. No group claimed responsibility for the attack, although al Shabaab has launched several recent attacks targeting Turkish citizens.[5]

An improvised explosive device (IED) targeting a Kenyan Defense Forces (KDF) convoy detonated on January 6 near Afmadow, Lower Shabelle region. Local residents said that the blast destroyed one of the KDF vehicles, although specific casualty figures are unavailable. No group claimed credit for the attack, but the target suggests al Shabaab.[6]

Officials from Turkey’s Foreign Ministry announced that Turkey is constructing a military training base in Mogadishu. The base will be used to train both the Somali National Army (SNA) as well as other the militaries of African countries. The officials also announced plans to construct a military school in Somalia to train SNA officers. The to-be-established training base and military school are part of a larger trend of Turkish support for Somalia’s security forces since establishment of the Somali Federal government (SFG) in 2012.[7]

Al Shabaab released a eulogy on December 31 for Abu al Hassan Rashid al Bulaydi, the head of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb’s (AQIM) Sharia Council. Bulaydi was killed in an ambush by Algerian forces on December 25 in the country’s northern Tizi Ouzou province. The eulogy reaffirms al Shabaab’s affiliation with al Qaeda amid efforts by Islamic State of Iraq and al Sham (ISIS) affiliates to encourage the group to change its allegiances.[8]